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High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! The Jungfernhof concentration camp was an improvised concentration camp in Latvia, at the village of Jumpravmui a, near the Skirotava railway station about three or four kilometers from Riga. The camp was in operation from December 1941 through March 1942, and served as overflow housing for Jews from Germany and Austria, who had originally had been intended for Minsk as a destination. The new destination, the Riga ghetto was also overcrowded and could not accommodate the Jewish people deported from Germany. The first transport train with 1,053 Berlin…mehr

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High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! The Jungfernhof concentration camp was an improvised concentration camp in Latvia, at the village of Jumpravmui a, near the Skirotava railway station about three or four kilometers from Riga. The camp was in operation from December 1941 through March 1942, and served as overflow housing for Jews from Germany and Austria, who had originally had been intended for Minsk as a destination. The new destination, the Riga ghetto was also overcrowded and could not accommodate the Jewish people deported from Germany. The first transport train with 1,053 Berlin Jews arrived at the Skirotava railway station on November 30, 1941. All persons on board were murdered later the same day at the Rumbula forest near Riga. The next four transports were, on the orders of SS-Brigadeführer Franz Walter Stahlecker, commander of Einsatzgruppen A, brought to Greater Jungfernhof, an abandoned farming estate on the Daugava river. Originally Jungfernhof was to have been established as an SS business enterprise, and being under the jurisdiction of the SS it could be employed without consulting with the German civil administration ("Gebietskommissariat") in Latvia.